Association of State Wetland Managers Annual Meeting March ... · Association of State Wetland...

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Association of State Wetland Managers Annual Meeting

March 24, 2015

NCTC, Shepherdstown, WV

Andrew Robertson, Director aroberts@smumn.edu

How Do You Turn This?

Into This?

Landscape Level Planning • Consider all aspects of the landscape natural (primeval), rural

and urban

• All should be part of the planning hierarchy because each element defines human experience in the landscape

• Then must consider how human activities (communities, commodity flows, employment and leisure) act to shape these elements

• Planning for wetland preservation, restoration and enhancement should occur within that framework.

Some Lessons Learned 1. Know your audience: level of knowledge, expectations,

community issues

2. Use graphics and/or handouts to describe data and techniques

3. Limit explanations of how wetland data is generated. Just enough to convey confidence in the processes

4. Describe information that is available (e.g. GIS layers)

5. Explain how process will assess and refine this (e.g. maps showing restoration opportunities) and explain what it is not

Interviews:

Question 2: When you hear the word “wetland” what pops into your mind? Question 3: Are you familiar with, or do you use, wetlands in your community? If so, please provide examples. Wetland Ecosystem Services This project would develop a framework for identifying the services that wetlands provide to communities. This framework would then be used to prioritize areas for future wetland mitigation and restoration projects within watersheds. Question 4: Would you be interested in learning more about the services wetlands provide in your community? Question 5: Have you (or your community, business, etc.) experienced problems with flooding or storm water runoff recently? If so, please elaborate.

Understanding Expectations

Social Science Approaches

When you hear the word “wetland” what pops into your mind?

Army Corps

DNR

County

Poor comm of regulations and statutes

Misunderstanding of process and opportunities

Lack of edu about wetland functions

Wetland Mitigation in Douglas County

Red clay soils

Flooding

Loss of prime agricultural

land

Erosion of tax base

Decreasing site

availability

Mitigation Bankers

Issues Location Challenges

Land Use

Simplified PowerPoints

11

So, what is a watershed anyway?

12

Where land and water meet:

1) Water – standing, flowing, ponding (hydrology) 2) Soils – saturated, wet, mucky, peat organic (hydric) 3) Vegetation - adapted to wet conditions (hydrophytic)

What are Wetlands?

Wetlands are not just this

They vary in size, type & appearance

What do Wetlands Look Like?

Based on Eggers & Reed – Wetland Plants and Plant Communities of MN & WI

What do Wetlands Look Like?

List of Wetland Functions

Plant Diversity Fish and Wildlife Habitat Flood/Stormwater

Management Water Quality

Improvement Shoreline Protection Groundwater

Recharge/Discharge Aesthetics/Recreation/

Education

Many watershed problems

are linked to large scale changes in

how water & other

materials move

across the landscape.

Severe storms are on the rise.

Photo credits: Superior Telegram / UW Superior

Simplified Map Products

Orientation Map

Simple Watershed Map

Meaningful Analysis

Michigan WFA

Michigan WFA • Wetland functional

assessment – current and historic wetlands

• Parcel and ownership information

• Calculate wetland functional units (acres * functional rank)

• Target restoration and preservation by ownership

Michigan WFA

Map Presentation Tools

Data Driven Pages

• ArcGIS tool for generating a series of output pages from one layout and a set of map extents

• Extents are define by areas of interest

• Results presented and distributed in PDF format

• Use PDF functions to zoom pan and query

LSB Example

Amigos Bravos

ESRI Story Maps • ArcGIS tool for generating map

books for non-technical audiences

• Published over the internet through ArcGIS Online

• Method of summarizing issues for managers and decisions makers

• Assist with collaboration and communication

• Does not require any specialized GIS knowledge or skill.

ESRI Story Maps - NCSU

ESRI Story Maps - NCSU

ESRI Story Maps - NCSU

Questions?

Andy Robertson Associate Director GeoSpatial Services Saint Mary's University of Minnesota aroberts@smumn.edu 507-457-8746

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